---
title: Manual Installation
description: Install and configure Plate in your React project without relying on UI component libraries.
---

This guide walks you through setting up Plate from scratch, giving you full control over styling and component rendering. This approach is ideal if you're not using a UI library like shadcn/ui or Tailwind CSS.

<Steps>

### Create Project

<Callout type="info">
This guide uses **Vite** for demonstrating the initial project setup. Plate is framework-agnostic and integrates seamlessly with other React environments like Next.js or Remix. You can adapt the general setup principles to your chosen framework.
</Callout>

To begin with Vite, create a new project and select the **React + TypeScript** template:

```bash
npm create vite@latest
```

### Install Core Dependencies

First, install the necessary Plate packages. These packages provide the core editor functionality, React integration, and basic plugins for marks and elements.

```bash
npm install platejs @platejs/basic-nodes
```

-   `platejs`: The core Plate engine and React components.
-   `@platejs/basic-nodes`: Plugin for basic nodes like headings, bold, italic, underline, etc.

### TypeScript Configuration

Plate provides ESM packages. If you're using TypeScript, ensure your `tsconfig.json` is configured correctly. The recommended setup for Plate requires TypeScript 5.0+ with the `"moduleResolution": "bundler"` setting:

```jsonc
// tsconfig.json
{
  "compilerOptions": {
    // ... other options
    "module": "esnext", // or commonjs if your setup requires it and handles ESM interop
    "moduleResolution": "bundler",
    // ... other options
  },
}
```

<Callout type="info">
  If you cannot use `"moduleResolution": "bundler"` or are on an older TypeScript version, please see our [full TypeScript guide](/docs/typescript) for alternative configurations using path aliases.
</Callout>

### Create Your First Editor

Start by creating a basic editor component. This example sets up a simple editor.

```tsx title="src/App.tsx"
import React from 'react';
import type { Value } from 'platejs';
import { Plate, PlateContent, usePlateEditor } from 'platejs/react';

export default function App() {
  const editor = usePlateEditor();

  return (
    <Plate editor={editor}>
      <PlateContent 
        style={{ padding: '16px 64px', minHeight: '100px' }}
        placeholder="Type your amazing content here..."
      />
    </Plate>
  );
}
```

<Callout type="info">
  `usePlateEditor` creates a memoized editor instance, ensuring stability across re-renders. For a non-memoized version, use `createPlateEditor` from `platejs/react`.
</Callout>

<ComponentPreview name="installation-next-01-editor-demo" height="200px" />

At this point, you'll have a very basic editor capable of displaying and editing plain text.

### Adding Basic Marks

Let's add support for basic text formatting like bold, italic, and underline.

```tsx showLineNumbers title="src/App.tsx" {4-8,32}
import React from 'react';
import type { Value } from 'platejs';

import {
  BoldPlugin,
  ItalicPlugin,
  UnderlinePlugin,
} from '@platejs/basic-nodes/react';
import {
  Plate,
  PlateContent,
  usePlateEditor,
} from 'platejs/react';

const initialValue: Value = [
  {
    type: 'p',
    children: [
      { text: 'Hello! Try out the ' },
      { text: 'bold', bold: true },
      { text: ', ' },
      { text: 'italic', italic: true },
      { text: ', and ' },
      { text: 'underline', underline: true },
      { text: ' formatting.' },
    ],
  },
];

export default function App() {
  const editor = usePlateEditor({
    plugins: [BoldPlugin, ItalicPlugin, UnderlinePlugin],
    value: initialValue,
  });

  return (
    <Plate editor={editor}>
      {/* You would typically add a toolbar here to toggle marks */}
      <PlateContent style={{ padding: '16px 64px', minHeight: '100px' }} />
    </Plate>
  );
}
```

<Callout type="info" title="Default Components">
  Mark plugins like `BoldPlugin`, `ItalicPlugin`, and `UnderlinePlugin` come with default components that render as `<strong>`, `<em>`, and `<u>` elements respectively. You don't need to register custom components unless you want to customize their appearance.
</Callout>

<ComponentPreview name="installation-next-02-marks-demo" height="200px" />

You'll need to implement your own toolbar to apply these marks. For example, to toggle bold: `editor.tf.bold.toggle()`.

### Adding Basic Elements

Now, let's add support for block-level elements like headings, and blockquotes.

```tsx showLineNumbers title="src/App.tsx" {5,7-9,76-79}
import React from 'react';
import type { Value } from 'platejs';

import {
  BlockquotePlugin,
  BoldPlugin,
  H1Plugin,
  H2Plugin,
  H3Plugin,
  ItalicPlugin,
  UnderlinePlugin,
} from '@platejs/basic-nodes/react';
import {
  Plate,
  PlateContent,
  PlateElement,
  usePlateEditor,
  type PlateElementProps,
} from 'platejs/react';

const initialValue: Value = [
  {
    children: [{ text: 'Title' }],
    type: 'h3',
  },
  {
    children: [{ text: 'This is a quote.' }],
    type: 'blockquote',
  },
  {
    children: [
      { text: 'With some ' },
      { bold: true, text: 'bold' },
      { text: ' text for emphasis!' },
    ],
    type: 'p',
  },
];

// Define element components
function H1Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h1" {...props} />;
}

function H2Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h2" {...props} />;
}

function H3Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h3" {...props} />;
}

function BlockquoteElement(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return (
    <PlateElement
      as="blockquote"
      style={{
        borderLeft: '2px solid #eee',
        marginLeft: 0,
        marginRight: 0,
        paddingLeft: '24px',
        color: '#666',
        fontStyle: 'italic',
      }}
      {...props}
    />
  );
}

export default function App() {
  const editor = usePlateEditor({
    plugins: [
      BoldPlugin,
      ItalicPlugin,
      UnderlinePlugin,
      H1Plugin.withComponent(H1Element),
      H2Plugin.withComponent(H2Element),
      H3Plugin.withComponent(H3Element),
      BlockquotePlugin.withComponent(BlockquoteElement),
    ],
    value: initialValue,
  });

  return (
    <Plate editor={editor}>
      {/* You would typically add a toolbar here to toggle elements and marks */}
      <PlateContent style={{ padding: '16px 64px', minHeight: '100px' }} />
    </Plate>
  );
}
```

<Callout type="note">
  Notice how we use `Plugin.withComponent(Component)` to register components with block element plugins like headings and blockquotes. This is the recommended approach for associating React components with Plate plugins when you need custom styling or behavior.
</Callout>

<ComponentPreview name="installation-next-03-elements-demo" height="200px" />

### Handling Editor Value

To make the editor's content persistent, let's integrate state management to save and load the editor's value.

```tsx showLineNumbers title="src/App.tsx" {81-84,90-92}
import React from 'react';
import type { Value } from 'platejs';

import {
  BlockquotePlugin,
  BoldPlugin,
  H1Plugin,
  H2Plugin,
  H3Plugin,
  ItalicPlugin,
  UnderlinePlugin,
} from '@platejs/basic-nodes/react';
import {
  Plate,
  PlateContent,
  PlateElement,
  usePlateEditor,
  type PlateElementProps,
} from 'platejs/react';

const initialValue: Value = [
  {
    children: [{ text: 'Title' }],
    type: 'h3',
  },
  {
    children: [{ text: 'This is a quote.' }],
    type: 'blockquote',
  },
  {
    children: [
      { text: 'With some ' },
      { bold: true, text: 'bold' },
      { text: ' text for emphasis!' },
    ],
    type: 'p',
  },
];

// Define element components
function H1Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h1" {...props} />;
}

function H2Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h2" {...props} />;
}

function H3Element(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return <PlateElement as="h3" {...props} />;
}

function BlockquoteElement(props: PlateElementProps) {
  return (
    <PlateElement
      as="blockquote"
      style={{
        borderLeft: '2px solid #eee',
        marginLeft: 0,
        marginRight: 0,
        paddingLeft: '24px',
        color: '#666',
        fontStyle: 'italic',
      }}
      {...props}
    />
  );
}

export default function App() {
  const editor = usePlateEditor({
    plugins: [
      BoldPlugin,
      ItalicPlugin,
      UnderlinePlugin,
      H1Plugin.withComponent(H1Element),
      H2Plugin.withComponent(H2Element),
      H3Plugin.withComponent(H3Element),
      BlockquotePlugin.withComponent(BlockquoteElement),
    ],
    value: () => {
      const savedValue = localStorage.getItem('plate-manual-demo');
      return savedValue ? JSON.parse(savedValue) : initialValue;
    },
  });

  return (
    <Plate
      editor={editor}
      onChange={({ value }) => {
        localStorage.setItem('plate-manual-demo', JSON.stringify(value));
      }}
    >
      {/* Toolbar would go here */}
      <div style={{ padding: '8px 0' }}>
        <button
          onClick={() => editor.tf.setValue(initialValue)}
          style={{
            padding: '4px 8px',
            margin: '0 4px',
            border: '1px solid #ccc',
            borderRadius: '4px',
            cursor: 'pointer',
          }}
        >
          Reset
        </button>
      </div>
      <PlateContent
        style={{
          padding: '16px 64px',
          minHeight: '100px',
          border: '1px solid #eee',
          borderRadius: '4px',
        }}
        placeholder="Type your amazing content here..."
      />
    </Plate>
  );
}
```

<Callout type="info" title="Value Management">
  The example above demonstrates a basic pattern for managing editor value:
  - Initial value is set through the `value` option in `usePlateEditor`
  - Changes can be handled via the `onChange` prop on `<Plate>`
  - The reset button uses `editor.tf.setValue()` to restore the initial value
  - To control the value, see [Controlled Value](/docs/controlled)
</Callout>

<ComponentPreview name="installation-next-demo" />

### Next Steps

You've now set up a basic Plate editor manually! From here, you can:

*   **Add Styling:**
    *   For a quick start with pre-built components, consider using [Plate UI](/docs/installation/plate-ui)
    *   Or continue styling manually using CSS, CSS-in-JS libraries, or your preferred styling solution
*   **[Add Plugins](/docs/plugins):** Plate has a rich ecosystem of plugins for features like tables, mentions, images, lists, and more. Install their packages (e.g., `@platejs/table`) and add them to your `plugins` array.
*   **[Build a Toolbar](/docs/toolbar):** Create React components for toolbar buttons that use the [Editor Transforms](/docs/transforms) to apply formatting (e.g., `editor.tf.bold.toggle()`, `editor.tf.h1.toggle()`). You can also use the editor state with the [Editor API](/docs/api).
*   **Learn More:**
    *   [Editor Configuration](/docs/editor)
    *   [Plugin Configuration](/docs/plugin)
    *   [Plugin Components](/docs/plugin-components)

</Steps>
